The best 8-bit covers albums in the world… ever!

The Beatles, Daft Punk, Muse and more get the chiptune treatment

Wanna Hld Yr Handheld, Vol. 1

The hardest of hardcore chip musicians may disagree, but MusicRadar thinks that one of life’s great joys lies in hearing an artist or band’s work re-imagined in an 8-bit fashion.

Sometimes, it’s just the one song, but here, we’re celebrating the chiptune producers who’ve gone the extra mile and created a whole album’s worth of covers. This might be a kind of greatest hits set or, even more impressively, a note-but-note recreation of an individual album.

Where better place to start our round-up than with the biggest band of all time, and Wanna Hld Yr Handheld, Vol. 1.

It was only a matter of time before the chiptune community turned its hand to re-imagining The Fab Four’s back catalogue. This compilation, from 8-bit Operators, blends obvious selections (Sgt. Pepper, All You Need Is Love) with some of the lesser-known songs in The Beatles canon (I Will, Piggies and Sie Liebt Dich).

And the best bit? The Vol.1 suffix in the album title indicates that there’s more to come.

Kind of Bloop

Remember when Miles went digital?

Miles Davis’s Kind Of Blue is the jazz album that everyone owns, but you’ll never have heard it played quite like this. Project mastermind Andy Baio says he’d always wondered what chiptune jazz covers would sound like - now we’ve all got the chance to find out.

Tron Tribute

From the Moog to the microcomputer

With Daft Punk (more on them shortly) readying one of 2010’s most eagerly-awaited electronic albums in the shape of the soundtrack for Tron: Legacy, what better time to celebrate Wendy Carlos's score for the original 1982 film?

8 Bit Weapon has done the honours on this occasion, with these remixes being based on the original score. The Commodore 64, Nintendo NES, Nintendo Game Boy, Apple II, and Atari 2600 were all used in their creation.

Weezer - the 8-bit album

Dope noises from the Pterodactyl Squad

This one was released by video game music net label Pterodactyl Squad, which says of the project: “Do you remember that dream you had, where the sound chips from the beloved games consoles of your youth all got together and formed a Weezer tribute band? Yeah? No? OK. That dream is about to come true whether you had it or not.”

Or, indeed, whether you like it or not. The tracklisting spans Rivers Cuomo and co’s career and the music was mostly created on original videogame hardware running home-brew software.

Moon8

The Dark Side of the chiptune

Perhaps the most ambitious 8-bit tribute project of all, this is a note-by-note recreation of The Floyd’s 1973 opus that was made “entirely within the limits of the standard North American [Nintendo] NES”.

Moon8 was created by Canadian video game programmer and synth musician Brad Smith, and for absolute authenticity, he’s refused to split the MP3s into separate tracks, insisting that, like the original, the album should be heard as just two ‘sides’. That’s the kind of stubbornness we respect.